• @TheEntity
    link
    English
    862 days ago

    Supporting nazism is quite illegal in many places. In Germany for sure.

    • @errer
      link
      English
      142 days ago

      Clearly not if the far right party exists in Germany and their leaders aren’t being sent to jail. In the eyes of German law the AfD are not nazi enough to be illegal.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        32 days ago

        I don’t know if these anti Nazi laws have ever been enforced in a rigorous manner. And most politicians are too afraid of doing it because the Nazis have growing support by the people. I’m pretty sure they could do more to fight the afd legally. But then again, they could also do more to satisfy voters, so they don’t vote for extremist. Both is never going to happen.

        • zqps
          link
          fedilink
          English
          9
          edit-2
          1 day ago

          It is currently under legal review, though unfortunately caught up in Realpolitik and unlikely to go anywhere due to the government disbanding.

          Fact is the center-right always has a bullshit reason to sit on their hands. They stopped the NPD review years ago saying they aren’t popular enough to be a threat. Now with AfD they say they’re too popular to be banned.

          Institutions and laws are meaningless if they aren’t used as intended.

    • @FlowVoid
      link
      English
      3
      edit-2
      2 days ago

      Germany bans certain symbols, including the Nazi swastika, the Communist hammer and sickle, and the Hamas flag.

      But it does not otherwise ban support of those organizations/ideologies.

        • @FlowVoid
          link
          English
          12 days ago

          Yes, the organizations themselves are banned.

          Expressing support for them is not banned, unless accompanied by those symbols.

          • @Metz
            link
            English
            62 days ago

            Admittedly, it is not enforced often enough and hard enough, but in general this falls under criminal organisations law.

            German Criminal Code §129

            Whoever supports such an organisation or recruits members or supporters for such an organisation incurs a penalty of imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years or a fine.

          • zqps
            link
            fedilink
            English
            11 day ago

            We’re talking about twitter as a company and platform, not twitter users.